SafetyNET Community-based patient safety initiatives: development and application of a Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Survey

Martha Funabashi, Katherine A Pohlman, Silvano Mior, Maeve O'Beirne, Michael Westaway, Diana De Carvalho, Mohamed El-Bayoumi, Bob Haig, Darrell J Wade, Haymo W Thiel, J David Cassidy, Eric Hurwitz, Gregory N Kawchuk, Sunita Vohra

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Objectives: To: 1) develop/adapt and validate an instrument to measure patient safety attitudes and opinions of community-based spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) providers; 2) implement the instrument; and 3) compare results among healthcare professions.

Methods: A review of the literature and content validation were used for the survey development. Community-based chiropractors and physiotherapists in 4 Canadian provinces were invited.

Results: The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality's (AHRQ) Medical Office Survey on Patient Safety Culture was the preferred instrument. The survey was modified and validated, measuring 14 patient safety dimensions. 276 SMT providers volunteered to respond to the survey. Generally, SMT providers had similar or better patient safety dimension scores compared to the AHRQ 2016 medical offices database.

Discussion: We developed the first instrument measuring patient safety attitudes and opinions of community-based SMT providers. This instrument provides understanding of SMT providers' opinions and attitudes on patient safety and identifies potential areas for improvement.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of the Canadian Chiropractic Association
Volume62
Issue number3
Pages (from-to)130-142
ISSN0008-3194
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2018

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